My Mother’s Peasant Bread: The Best Easiest Bread You Will Ever Make
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
This is the no-knead bread recipe my mother has been baking for 45 years. Start to finish, it can be ready in three hours. It bakes in well-buttered Pyrex bowls — no need to preheat a baking vessel for this recipe — and it emerges golden and crisp with a soft, tender crumb. 🍞🍞🍞🍞🍞
When I tell you that, if forced, I had to pick one and only one recipe to share with you that this — my mother’s peasant bread — would be it, I am serious. I would almost in fact be OK ending the blog after this very post, retiring altogether from the wonderful world of food blogging, resting assured that you all had this knowledge at hand. This bread might just change your life.
The reason I say this is simple. I whole-heartedly believe that if you know how to make bread you can throw one hell of a dinner party. And the reason for this is because people go insane over homemade bread. Not once have I served this bread to company without being asked, “Did you really make this?” And questioned: “You mean with a bread machine?” But always praised: “Is there anything more special than homemade bread?”
And upon tasting homemade bread, people act as if you’re some sort of culinary magician. I would even go so far as to say that with homemade bread on the table along with a few nice cheeses and a really good salad, the main course almost becomes superfluous. If you nail it, fantastic. If you don’t, you have more than enough treats to keep people happy all night long.
The Magic of the Peasant Bread
So what, you probably are wondering, makes this bread so special when there are so many wonderful homemade bread recipes out there? Again, the answer is simple. For one, it’s a no-knead bread. I know, I know. There are two wildly popular no-knead bread recipes out there.
But unlike the others, this is a no-knead bread that can be started at 4:00 pm and turned out onto the dinner table at 7:00 pm. It bakes in well-buttered Pyrex bowls — there is no pre-heating of the baking vessels in this recipe — and it emerges golden and crisp without any steam pans or water spritzes. This is not artisan bread, nor is it trying to be. It is peasant bread, spongy and moist with a most delectable buttery crust.
Genuinely, I would be proud to serve this bread at a dinner party attended by Jim Lahey, Mark Bittman, Peter Reinhart, Chad Robertson, Jeff Hertzberg, and Zoe Francois. It is a bread I hope you will all give a go, too, and then proudly serve at your next dinner party to guests who might ask where you’ve stashed away your bread machine. And when this happens, I hope you will all just smile and say, “Don’t be silly. This is just a simple peasant bread. Easy as pie. I’ll show you how to make it some day.”
Peasant Bread Variations
Once you master the peasant bread, you can make any bread your heart desires — this simple no-knead bread recipe is the foundation of many of the other bread recipes on this site, namely this hugely popular overnight refrigerator focaccia and this simple homemade pizza dough. It’s even the inspiration behind this simple pita bread recipe and these no-knead dinner rolls.
The below post is organized as follows:
- How to Make Peasant Bread, Step by Step
- The Best Way to Store Bread
- Peasant Bread Dinner Rolls
- Peasant Bread Sandwich Bread
- How to Add Seeds and Nuts to Bread Dough
- How to Make Gluten-Free Peasant Bread
- How to Coat the Loaves in Seeds
- How to use Whole Wheat Flour
- How to Bake the Peasant Bread in a Dutch Oven
Many more variations on the peasant bread can be found in my cookbook, Bread Toast Crumbs:
Bread Toast Crumbs
Love the peasant bread? There’s now a book filled with 40 simple bread recipes plus 70 recipes to use up every crumb of every loaf you bake.
How to Make Peasant Bread, Step by Step
First: You need yeast.
This is the yeast I buy exclusively: SAF Instant Yeast. Instant yeast can be whisked into the flour directly without any blooming or proofing. If you want to stick to active-dry yeast, there are instructions in the recipe notes on how to do so. Red Star yeast is great.
Whisk together flour, salt, sugar, and instant yeast. Add lukewarm water.
Mix until you have a sticky dough ball. Let it rise for 1.5 to 2 hours…
… or until it looks like this:
Punch down the dough using two forks.
Then split the dough down the middle again using the two forks.
Because this is a very wet dough, it must be baked in an oven-proof bowl. I am partial to the Pyrex 1L 322 size, but any similarly sized oven-proof bowl will work.
Butter the bowls well; then transfer half of the dough to each prepared bow.
Let the dough rise again until it crowns the rim of the bowl, about 30 minutes.
Transfer the bowls to the oven to bake:
This bread is irresistible when it’s freshly baked, but it also makes wonderful toast on subsequent mornings as well as the best grilled cheese and sandwiches of all kinds.
The Best Way to Store Bread
If you want to store the bread at room temperature for 3 to 4 days, I think the best method is in a ziplock bag. I’ve tried other eco-friendly options, but nothing seems to keep bread freshest — the crumb the softest — better than a ziplock bag. You can re-use the bags again and again.
If you intend to keep the bread for longer, I would freeze it. I often slice bread as soon as it cools completely, transfer the slices to a ziplock bag, then freeze. This way, I know the bread was frozen at its freshest.
A ziplock bag will not prevent the crust of bread from turning soft, which is why I suggest always reheating day-old bread. I use a toaster at breakfast for slices of bread, and I reheat half or quarter loaves in the oven at 350ºF for 15 to 20 minutes when serving for dinner.
Bread revives so beautifully in the oven or toaster.
No-Knead Dinner Rolls
To use the peasant bread dough to make rolls, simply divide the dough into smaller portions and place in a buttered muffin tin as in these No-Knead Thyme Dinner Rolls (pictured below). This recipe for no-knead buttermilk pull-apart rolls is also based on the peasant bread recipe.
No-Knead Sandwich Bread
To make sandwich bread, multiply the recipe below by 1.5 and bake the bread in two buttered 8.5×4.5-inch loaf pans. Made with half all-purpose flour and half King Arthur Sprouted Wheat Flour (no longer available unfortunately), these seed-coated sandwich loaves (pictured below) have a soft and light crumb.
How to Add Nuts and Seeds to Bread Dough
To add seeds and nuts (or dried fruit and cheese), simply stir them into the dry ingredients. This recipe for Quinoa-and-Flax Toasting Bread will offer guidance on how much to add.
How to Make a Gluten-Free Peasant Bread
Making gluten-free peasant bread (pictured below) isn’t as simple as swapping in gluten-free flour for wheat flour. But the process is still relatively simple — in fact, because there’s only one rise, many people find the gluten-free peasant bread recipe to be even simpler than the original. Find the recipe here: Gluten-Free Peasant Bread
How to Coat the Loaves in Seeds
To coat the peasant bread in seeds, as pictured below, simply coat the bowls with everything bagel seasoning or with dukkah or sesame seeds or whatever seed mix you wish. The seed-coated loaves look so beautiful, and it’s amazing how much the flavor of the coating permeates the loaves. Find the recipe here: Everything Bagel Seasoning Peasant Bread
How to Use Whole Wheat Flour
To use whole wheat flour in the peasant bread, simply replace as much as 50% of the all-purpose flour with your favorite whole wheat flour: I’ve been loving the Cairnsprings Mill Trailblazer stone-milled flour. With the Trailblazer, I can use up to 75% of it in the peasant bread, and it yields a beautiful, chewy texture as well as a lovely flavor and aroma.
When using whole wheat flour, you may have to use more or less water — there is no rule as to how much more or less, and it will take some trial and error to get right because all flours absorb water differently. When I use the Trailblazer flour, for example, I reduce the water by at least 50 grams.
If you’d like to learn more about whole wheat flour and stone-milled flours, read this: Easy Sourdough Bread (Whole Wheat-ish)
How to Bake the Peasant Bread in a Dutch Oven
If you’re looking for more of a crackling crusted boule (characteristic of a loaf of sourdough bread) as opposed to the buttery crispness of the peasant bread, you can bake the peasant bread dough in a preheated Dutch oven.
There are detailed instructions below the recipe in the notes section, but one thing to keep in mind before you begin is dough hydration. The peasant bread is a very high-hydration dough, meaning there is a lot of water relative to flour. Because baking the peasant bread in a Dutch oven will require some handling of the dough — to shape it into a round and to create some tension — you may want to reduce the water from the start. Consider holding back 20-30 grams of water to make the process more manageable for you.
My Mother’s Peasant Bread: The Best Easiest Bread You Will Ever Make
- Total Time: 2 hours 27 minutes
- Yield: 2 loaves
Description
Notes:
The bread:
This is a sticky, no-knead dough, so, some sort of baking vessel, such as pyrex bowls (you need two 1-qt bowls) or ramekins for mini loaves is required to bake this bread. See notes below the recipe for sources. You can use a bowl that is about 2 qt or 2 L in size to bake off the whole batch of dough (versus splitting the dough in half) but do not use this size for baking half of the dough — it is too big.
Peasant Bread Fans! There is a book: Bread Toast Crumbs, a loaf-to-crumb bread-baking book, filled with tips and tricks and answers to the many questions that have been asked over the years. In the book you will find 40 variations of the master peasant bread recipe + 70 recipes for using up the many loaves you will bake. Learn more about the book here or buy it here.
Ingredients
- 4 cups (512 g) unbleached all-purpose or bread flour
- 2 teaspoons (10 g) kosher salt
- 2 cups (454 g) lukewarm water (made by mixing 1.5 cups cold water with 0.5 cup boiling water)
- 2 teaspoons (8 g) sugar
- 2 teaspoons (8 g) instant yeast, I love SAF Instant Yeast, see notes below
- room temperature butter, about 2 tablespoons
Instructions
- Mixing the dough: In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the flour, salt, sugar, and instant yeast (I love SAF Instant Yeast). Add the water. Mix until the flour is absorbed. (If you are using active dry yeast, see notes below.)
- Let it rise. Cover bowl with a tea towel or plastic wrap and set aside in a warm spot to rise for at least an hour. (In the winter or if you are letting the bread rise in a cool place, it might take as long as two hours to rise.) This is how to create a slightly warm spot for your bread to rise in: Turn the oven on at any temperature (350ºF or so) for one minute, then turn it off. Note: Do not allow the oven to get up to 300ºF, for example, and then heat at that setting for 1 minute — this will be too hot. Just let the oven preheat for a total of 1 minute — it likely won’t get above 100ºF. The goal is to just create a slightly warm environment for the bread.
- Preheat the oven to 425ºF. Grease two 1-qt or 1.5-qt oven-safe bowls (see notes below) with about a tablespoon of butter each. Using two forks, punch down your dough, scraping it from the sides of the bowl, which it will be clinging to. As you scrape it down try to pull the dough toward the center (see video below for guidance). You want to loosen the dough entirely from the sides of the bowl, and you want to make sure you’ve punched it down. Then, take your two forks and divide the dough into two equal portions — eye the center of the mass of dough, and starting from the center and working out, pull the dough apart with the two forks. Then scoop up each half and place into your prepared bowls. This part can be a little messy — the dough is very wet and will slip all over the place. Using small forks or forks with short tines makes this easier — my small salad forks work best; my dinner forks make it harder. It’s best to scoop it up fast and plop it in the bowl in one fell swoop. Some people like to use flexible, plastic dough scrapers for this step.
- Let the dough rise again for about 20 to 30 minutes on the countertop near the oven (or near a warm spot) or until it has risen to just below or above (depending on what size bowl you are using) the top of the bowls. (Note: Do not do the warm-oven trick for the second rise, and do not cover your bowls for the second rise. Simply set your bowls on top of your oven, so that they are in a warm spot. Twenty minutes in this spot usually is enough for my loaves.)
- Bake it. Bake for 15 minutes. Reduce the heat to 375º and bake for 15 to 17 minutes longer. Remove from the oven and turn the loaves onto cooling racks. If you’ve greased the bowls well, the loaves should fall right out onto the cooling racks. If the loaves look a little pale and soft when you’ve turned them out onto your cooling racks, place the loaves into the oven (outside of their bowls) and let them bake for about 5 minutes longer. Remove from oven and let cool for 10 minutes before cutting.
Notes
- The bowls: The cheapest, most widely available 1-qt bowl is the Pyrex 322. Update: These bowls are becoming harder to find and more expensive. As a result, I’m suggesting this cheaper option: the Pyrex 3-piece set. You can split the dough in half as always (see recipe) and bake half in the 1-quart bowl and half in the 1.5 quart bowl. The loaves will not be the same shape, but they will be delicious nonetheless.
- Yeast: I buy SAF Instant Yeast in bulk from Amazon I store it in my fridge or freezer, and it lasts forever. If you are using the packets of yeast (the kind that come in the 3-fold packets), just go ahead and use a whole packet — It’s 2.25 teaspoons. I have made the bread with active dry, rapid rise, and instant yeast, and all varieties work. The beauty of instant yeast is that there is no need to “proof” it — you can add the yeast directly to the flour. I never use active-dry yeast anymore.
- If you have active-dry yeast on hand and want to use it, here’s how: In a small mixing bowl, dissolve the sugar into the water. Sprinkle the yeast over top. There is no need to stir it up. Let it stand for about 10 to 15 minutes or until the mixture is foamy and/or bubbling just a bit — this step will ensure that the yeast is active. Meanwhile, in a large bowl, whisk together the flour and salt. When the yeast-water-sugar mixture is foamy, stir it up, and add it to the flour bowl. Mix until the flour is absorbed.
- Troubleshooting: You can find step-by-step video instruction here.
- Several commenters have had trouble with the second rise, and this seems to be caused by the shape of the bowl they are letting the dough rise in the second time around. Two hours for the second rise is too long. If you don’t have a 1-qt bowl, bake 3/4 of the dough in a loaf pan and bake the rest off in muffin tins or a popover pan. The second rise should take no more than 30 minutes.
- Also, you can use as many as 3 cups of whole wheat flour, but the texture changes considerably. I suggest trying with all all-purpose or bread flour to start and once you get the hang of it, start trying various combinations of whole wheat flour and/or other flours.
- The single most important step you can take to make this bread truly foolproof is to invest in a digital scale. This onecosts under $10. If you are not measuring by weight, do this: scoop flour into the measuring cup using a separate spoon or measuring cup; level off with a knife. The flour should be below the rim of the measuring cup.
- Here’s a printable version of this recipes that’s less wordy: Peasant Bread Recipe, Simplified
- How to Bake the Peasant Bread in a Dutch Oven: Preheat a Dutch Oven for 45 minutes at 450ºF. Dust a clean work surface with flour. After the first rise, turn the dough out onto the floured surface and shape it into a ball: I like to fold it envelope style from top to bottom, then side to side; then I flip it over and use the pinkie edges of my hands to pinch the dough underneath and create some tension. Transfer the dough to a sheet of parchment paper. Let rest for 20 minutes. If you feel your dough is spreading too much you can lift up the sheet of parchment paper, dough and all, and place it in a bowl of a similar size. After the 20 minutes, transfer the dough, parchment paper and all to the Dutch oven. Carefully cover it. Bake 30 minutes. Uncover. Bake 15 minutes more.
- To bake the peasant bread in a loaf pan: If you are using an 8.5×4.5-inch loaf pan or a 9×5-inch loaf pan, you can bake 3/4 of the dough in it; bake off the rest of the dough in ramekins or other small vessels … the mini loaves are so cute. You can also make 1.5x the recipe, and bake the bread in 2 loaf pans. If you have a large loaf pan, such as a 10×6-inch loaf pan, you can bake off the entire batch of dough in it. For loaf pans, bake at 375ºF for 45 minutes.
- How to Bake at Hight Altitude:
- First try the original recipe as written (preferably with a scale). You may not need to make any adjustments. One commenter, who lives at 9200 ft finds the original recipe to work just fine as is.
- If the original recipe doesn’t work, try adding a little bit more water because it rises fast and it is so dry: about a quarter cup for every 512 g of flour.
- Try decreasing the yeast to 1.5 teaspoons.
- If your dough is especially gooey, try decreasing the water by 1/4 cup. But, if you aren’t using a scale, my first suggestion would be to buy a scale and weigh the flour, and make the bread once as directed with the 2 cups water and 512 grams flour, etc.
- Punch the dough down twice before transferring it to the buttered Pyrex bowls. In other words, let it rise for 1-1.5 hours, punch it down, let it rise again for about an hour, punch it down, then transfer it to the buttered bowls.
- Variations:
- #1. Cornmeal. Substitute 1 cup of the flour with 1 cup of cornmeal. Proceed with the recipe as directed.
- #2. Faux focaccia. Instead of spreading butter in two Pyrex bowls in preparation for baking, butter one 9×9-inch glass baking dish and one Pyrex bowl or just butter one large 9×13-inch Pyrex baking dish. If using two vessels, divide the dough in half and place each half in prepared baking pan. If using only one large baking dish, place all of the dough in the dish. Drizzle dough with 1 tablespoon of olive oil (if using the small square pan) and 2 tablespoons of olive oil (if using the large one). Using your fingers, gently spread the dough out so that it fits the shape of the pan. Use your fingers to create dimples in the surface of the dough. Sprinkle surface with chopped rosemary and sea salt. Let rise for 20 to 30 minutes. Bake for 15 minutes at 425ºF and 17 minutes (or longer) at 375ºF. Remove from pan and let cool on cooling rack.
- #3. Thyme Dinner Rolls
- #4 Gluten-free
- #5. Everything Bagel Seasoning Bread. Simply coat the buttered bowls with Everything Bagel Seasoning.
- #6: Whole Wheat Peasant Bread. Use as much as 50% whole wheat flour.
- Prep Time: 5 minutes
- Cook Time: 32 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: Baked
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
6,563 Comments on “My Mother’s Peasant Bread: The Best Easiest Bread You Will Ever Make”
Lovely bread. The last no-knead recipe I had required the dough to rise for 8-12 hours! So easy!
Great to hear, Christine! Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
This recipie is so delightful! My mom made this for us as kids and I’ve been looking for the recipe. This tastes and smells just like home. Thank you so very much for bringing me back to my childhood!
So nice to read this, Samantha 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks for writing.
Could these be baked in a loaf pan? I really love these and they are a huge hit with the family!
Yes! For a single loaf pan, use these proportions:
3 cups (384 g) bread flour or all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons (5 g) instant yeast, see notes if using active dry
1 1/2 teaspoons (7 g) sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons (5 g) kosher salt
1 1/2 cups (340 grams) lukewarm water
Softened butter, for greasing the pan
1 tablespoon olive oil — I slick the dough with this before transferring the dough to the loaf pan
Absolutely love this recipe… but could you please tell me which kosher salt you use… and maybe a conversion weight for pink himilayan.. thanks you
Hi Mike! I use Diamond Crystal kosher salt. Use 10 grams (the same amount) of the pink Himalayan salt — the volume amount will be different. In other words, regardless of what salt you use, use 10 grams.
So easy, so good!! I had two ‘happy accidents’ while following the recipe. I intended to use only half the ingredients (but forgot that when I added the yeast-oops) so it had risen a lot (too much) to transfer to the smaller pyrex I was using when it came time ‘half & separate’. So I had to let it rise a third time. All in all, still finished in four hours and still amazingly delicious!
Great to hear, Dianne! I love how forgiving this recipe is. Thanks for writing and sharing 🙂 🙂 🙂
I just made this recipe. I had issues with it rising both times. I used coarse kosher salt and it came out a little too salty. I saw your comment too use 10 gms of salt, so I will do that next time. For the most part, the taste was great.
Hi Paul! Was it Morton’s brand? Regardless, using the scale should make a difference! Thanks for writing 🙂
OMG, I’ve been making bread for years and NOTHING compares to the quality, flavor, simplicity and speed of this recipe! I’ll have to incorporate my sourdough starter into this, but I see there’s input on how to do this, so I’m set. My husband has declared this as the best bread he’s ever had. Too easy to believe that it’s this good, but it is! I can’t go back now – Peasant bread all the way, all the time now. Thank you for this recipe, I can die happy now.
Awwww Nancy, so great to read all of this 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks so much for writing and sharing your experience. I love sourdough as well, but this is the recipe I come back to again and again 🙂
Delicious, thanks so much for the recipe. Just a note – 2 US cups water weighs 480g, not 454.
If you are hiding a 2l bowl because you don’t have two of the smaller ones, what’s the steps after it has risen? Many thanks
Hi! You’ll still deflate it, but you won’t divide it — simply transfer it to the 2L bowl, let it rise again until the dough nearly crowns the rim (this might take 45 minutes); then bake it. Add 12 to 15 minutes to the baking time.
Would you add the extra 12-15 minutes of baking time while the oven is at 425 or 375?
When it’s at 375ºF 🙂
I was looking for the rest of the ‘troubleshooting Videos”. When I selected the link, it only had video 1. I was looking for help with the first rise when using 1/2 white whole flour. It barely rose after 1.5 hrs. Any thoughts?
I would just let it rise longer, especially this time of year when it’s very cold out. Try letting it rise for 3 hours. Are you using a scale to measure? Instant yeast? A warm place to rise?
Very easy to make, I absolutely recommend it. I prefer it to buying bread, and it is way cheaper to make it myself. I recommend using a tablespoon of salt instead of a teaspoon. Also, the more butter on your loaf pan, the better. I also recommend using bread flour.
Great to hear, Catherine! Thanks for writing and sharing your notes 🙂
I can’t believe how good this bread is, and how easy! I’m now the official bread maker for my mother-in-law, and she has very high standards for her bread. Thank You! If I can keep up, we’re going to try not to buy bread from the store again. Yes, it’s that good! Addictive. Crispy crust and a soft, airy inside. We just have to learn how to make it last more than one day per loaf. Thanks again for sharing something so special from your Mom.
So nice to read this, Andrea 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks so much for writing. And I know: once you start with the homemade stuff, it’s hard to go back.
Ah! This bread came out SO good! And so easy. Thank you!
Great to hear, Joyce! Thanks for writing 🙂
Could you freeze the dough after the first rise?
Yes!
I have made this bread so many times now in just the past few months (when I first discovered it). First time, I plopped them into some muffin tins since I didn’t have the bowls. Since then, I have purchased 2 sets of the bowls, so I can do them the same way, lol. I will say, that no matter what I do, I can never quite get the same coloring on my bread. It’s always far lighter. Still tastes absolutely amazing though! Simultaneously mad/glad that I didn’t find this recipe sooner.
Oh, and I do always follow the recipe exactly! Scale and all! Thanks so much for this piece of amazingness!
Great to hear all of this, Kim! A few thoughts: You can bake at a higher temperature: try 450 to start; then turn it down after 15 minutes. Butter the bowl very generously. Finally: you aren’t using bleached flour, correct?
Not using bleached! I did actually raise the temp up 10 degrees this last time, got slightly darker. Will bump all the way to 450 next time! Which will probably be tomorrow 😂.
Always generously buttering everything
OK! Great to hear all of this. Yeah, I would keep bumping up that temperature until you get the color you are looking for. Another option: once the bread is finished baking, turn the loaves out of the bowl, then place the loaves directly on the oven racks for 5 to 10 minutes more.
Best bread recipe. Love it. Make it every week!
Great to hear, Maria!
I’m trying to perfect this bread because it looks so amazing! I’ve tried twice and my dough always seems much drier than yours looks in your video, any tips?
PS even when I haven’t made it perfectly and the texture is off it still tastes delicious! All of this coming from a novice baker 🙂
Hi! And great to hear 🙂 Are you using a scale to measure? That will be the first step to take… you’re probably just using too much flour, and using a scale will ensure you are measuring accurately. What type of flour are you using?
How many calories are in a slice of this amazing bread?
I love this bread so much! Do you think I could shape it into a baguette?
I think it’s a little too wet to be shaped into a baguette, but you could try reducing the water to make a slightly stiffer dough and see if that might work. Baguettes in the home oven are tricky!
Just finished making one loaf of this amazing bread. Thanks to you and your mother for sharing.
Great to hear, John 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks so much for writing.
My family loves this bread and it’s gone faster than I can make it! I Make this often in two 9×5 pans because that’s all I have and cut the time a few minutes shorter and it makes small but delicious loafs! Love that I don’t have to wait for it to rise over night like most breads. Tastes even better with everything bagel seasoning on it!
Great to read all of this! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂 🙂 🙂
Hi! Love this recipe, making it for the 2nd time now!! I wanted to ask if you can let the dough sit for more then 20-30 minutes for the second rise to bake a few hours later? Essentially I want to make the 2 loaves about 3-4 hours apart. Is this doable or should I refrigerate after the 2nd rise? Thanks for taking the time to reply!!
Hi! Yes, you can, but you will want to refrigerate that second loaf until you are ready to bake it otherwise it will over-proof in the bowl and won’t bake properly.
I have baked a lot of bread in my day but this peasant bread is the one everyone asks for me to make. It is perfect for so many things. Tonight it will become garlic bread for spaghetti. Tomorrow a loaf will come with me for dinner at daughter in law’s house. You can’t go wrong with this bread.
Great to read, Pam! Thanks for writing 🙂
So very delicious. Thank you so much.
Hello again Alexandra,
I made the Oatmeal-Maple bread in the small (4x4x9) USA pullman Loaf Pan and loved the result. So tall, so square, so STRAIGHT. But still a bread with personality because of the domed top!
So now I’m on a pullman pan baking quest.
1. Is the small Pullman loaf pan essentially equivalent to ONE bowl bread or TWO?
2. If one, could the entire dough be baked in the larger (4x4x13) USA Pullman loaf pan?
3. If the dough for two bowl breads fit into the smaller pan, would your sandwich bread recipes (essentially scaled up 1.5 from the bowl bread dough?) in your book (pages 74 and 75) fit in the larger pullman loaf pan?
Sorry about all these questions, hopefully your well developed instincts, answering them wixll be easy!
If it’s not obvious, your book and website continue to make me happy almost on a daily basis!
Susanna in Seattle
Thank you, Susanna 🙂 🙂 🙂
1. Is the small Pullman loaf pan essentially equivalent to ONE bowl bread or TWO?
It’s roughly 3/4 of the entire bowl bread recipe (so 1.5 bowl loaves). I find recipes with 3 to 3.25 cups of flour work great in it. There is some wiggle room of course, and you might be able to get away with baking a recipe that calls for 4 cups of flour in it, but I do worry that it might not bake properly.
2. If one, could the entire dough be baked in the larger (4x4x13) USA Pullman loaf pan?
I have a friend who always baked the entire peasant bread recipe in a 10×5-inch loaf pan. I think the 4x4x13 would work great as well.
3. If the dough for two bowl breads fit into the smaller pan, would your sandwich bread recipes (essentially scaled up 1.5 from the bowl bread dough?) in your book (pages 74 and 75) fit in the larger pullman loaf pan?
I’m not sure the larger pullman loaf pan would be big enough for the entire batch of a 1.5xpeasant bread recipe. I would start with the single recipe and see how that works first.
Good luck!
Sorry about all these questions, hopefully your well developed instincts, answering them wixll be easy!
If it’s not obvious, your book and website continue to make me happy almost on a daily basis!
I love this bread! I added three cheeses and jalapeños and it’s a keeper !
Yay and yum!
Our favorite morning toast is the quinoa-flax bread. Last week I made the loaf pan recipe of your Peasant bread (via Cup of Joe.) My husband said, “the way to a man’s heart is through toast.” Thought you’d want to know. Looking forward to Pizza book. 😊
Awwwwwe 🙂 🙂 🙂 I love this so much. Thanks so much for writing and thank you for your kind words regarding the pizza book. Means a lot 💕
Absolutely amazed by this recipe. I’ve only ever used a bread maker before and I’m still not getting bread to rave about. First time with this recipe and the results were perfect. So easy to make too (your video is great to follow). Bread maker is in the cupboard where it will stay!
Thank you for sharing – you have another happy peasant bread maker. 👍🏻
I love having another happy peasant bread maker! Thanks for writing and sharing all of this.
Hello Ali, I’m new here but I love this recipe of your Mom’s Peasant bread. I’m going to try and make it as soon as I get a couple quart Pyrex bowls. It looks absolutely delicious!! Thank you so much for sharing it with us. I’m a diabetic so I will need to be careful because I love bread but I do want to try it! 😊
Great to hear, Elaine 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks so much. Hope you love it!
Love, love, love this recipe! I always use 1/2 white whole wheat and both the peasant bread and focaccia always turn out great! I recently made a batch and added cinnamon and coated the outside in rolled outs. Delicious! My question is how much rolled oats could I add to the batter without it affecting the outcome? (I know you have oat loaf recipes on the website, but I’d REALLY like to adapt this one if I can.). Any thoughts?
Hi! Great to hear 🙂 I think you could add 1 cup of oats.
Love this recipe! Comes out perfect every time. Do you think it would be possible to substitute honey for the sugar?
Yes!
I’ve made this recipe for bread COUNTLESS TIMES!
It come out beautiful and tasty EVERY TIME!
I’m 63 and live alone in a 4 story building with other low income elderly people.
This recipe makes 2 perfectly sized loaves.. and I give the other away.
Mmmmm
Thank you!
Awww this is the best to read. Thanks so much for writing and sharing it!